Sora isn’t yet released – OpenAI are working with creatives for feedback. Its glitches and gremlins are plain to see, but Trillio sought to make a virtue of them. “The surreal and hallucinatory aspects of AI allow you to explore new ideas that you would have never dreamed of,” he said. “Using AI to simply recreate reality is boring. I wasn’t interested in capturing realism but something that felt hyperreal.”
Technophiles have been excited to see Sora in action, and there’s been a lot of positive reaction from Washed Out fans. Many, however, have been scathing. Not only of what they believe to be a bad piece of art, but because they also fear it’ll push humans in the creative industries closer towards obsolescence.
Posting on X, Trevor Powers, aka Youth Lagoon, an US electronic pop contemporary of Greene’s, went in hard. “This Washed Out AI vid says nothing, does nothing, is nothing. Ugly slog too.”
On the same platform, Trillio came in for a barrage of criticism, including, “whatever your job is (it clearly isn’t ‘artist’) I hope you lose it to a machine”.
The YouTube comments thread got so grim (“nightmare fuel” read one of the politer remarks), that Greene felt compelled to step in. “Whether you’re scared, excited, or undecided about these new tools, they are here to stay,” he defended himself. “We just need to collectively figure out the most responsible ways to harness them.”
AI has been used in music videos without provoking as much anger. Earlier this year, Billy Joel’s video for his song “Turn the Lights Back On” blended real life footage of the 74-year-old piano man with AI de-aged younger versions of himself. AI-generated album art and gig posters are already everywhere.
While I understand some of the fury directed Washed Out’s way, it also reveals some naivety as to the extent to which the music world has been upended by technology in recent decades. Not to mention the paranoia about the unstoppable onrush of AI in practically all walks of life.
Most video budgets these days are in the low thousands of pounds, if not the low hundreds. Videos are no longer designed for MTV rotation, but for streaming on smartphones and tablets. Many are still beautiful, a few are still spectacular. But most are lo-fi and perfunctory – a bit of eye-candy as a conduit to online clicks and shares. Surely anything that helps cash-strapped creatives realise bigger, perhaps even previously impossible ideas, is a good thing?
AI stirs a profound fear lurking in every human soul: that we are all replaceable, perhaps even erasable, by technology. It’s not so different to when 19th century portrait artists railed against photography, nor when the Musicians Union tried to ban synthesisers because they believed they would end orchestras. Did video kill the radio star? Not really.
I’m optimistic in believing AI can only ever be as good as those who instruct it, that it’ll never truly be able to decode complex human emotion, and that it’ll prove at best a new tool in the box of creators. Conversations around ethical use need to be had, and videos like “The Hardest Part” are a great point for starting them. “I hope that the video can play a role in amplifying that discussion,” comments Greene.
Malcolm Jack is a freelance journalist.
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